A passage or quotation taken or selected from a book, document, film, or the like; extract. 2. to take or select (a passage) from a book, film, or the like; extract. 3. to take or select passages<span> from (a book, film, or the like); abridge by choosing representative sections.</span>
C- by describing experiments scientists have done about memory and smells
Answer:
B, a copy or duplicate.
Explanation:
It isn't the actual ship so it can't be the original version because the original ship would be big not small. It's a ship so it can't be a companion, and no one is presenting anything so it's definitely not an assisted presentation.
The answer is
C.For the first time in decades,Baby Boomers have been outnumbered by another group-the millennial.
Emily Dickinson is world renown among poets and those who love literature for her emphasis on both thought and feeling.
She is considered a master of form and syntax and is often called 'a poet of paradox'.
Generally speaking her poems tend to be short and they usually use only one voice (which is not necessarily that of the poet). She published well over 1800 poems of which only a handful of them were titled as is the case of the poem listed here.
Notice her use of form and paradox in referring to hope as a thing with feathers, something that never asks for anything in return.